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The tallest building by height in the U.S. city of Columbus, Ohio, is the 41-story Rhodes State Office Tower, which rises 629 feet (192 m) and was completed in 1973. [1] The structure is the fifth-tallest completed building in the state , [ 2 ] and is also Ohio's tallest building that rises in the center of a city block . [ 1 ]
At 410 feet high, the Wexner Medical Center's new patient tower ranks among the 10 tallest buildings in Columbus. The hospital's new inpatient tower hovers 26 stories and 410 feet over Route 315 ...
The hospital gained its most distinctive modern feature in 1971 – a tall cylindrical tower with a Modernist design. The 16-story tower was designed with all private rooms, unique in 1971. In 1992, Quorum Health Group purchased it, renaming it Park Medical Center. The Ohio State University (OSU) acquired it for about $13 million in 1999.
The Near East side is bounded by two zip codes: 43203 and 43205. [6] As of the 2010 Census, 20,380 residents live in the 43203 and 43205 zip codes. There are 12,368 housing units in the Near East; roughly 30% of these units are unoccupied. Nearly 70% of the units in the Near East are Renter Occupied. [7]
The 26-floor, 1.9 million-square-floor inpatient hospital is the largest capital project in Ohio State University history. 'A feat of engineering': A look inside Ohio State's $1.9-billion ...
The University District (or University Area), is a 2.8-square-mile (7.3 km 2) area located 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Downtown Columbus, Ohio that is home to the main campus of Ohio State University, the Battelle Institute, and Wexner Medical Center. [1]
Downtown Columbus is the central business district of Columbus, Ohio. Downtown is centered on the intersection of Broad and High Streets, and encompasses all of the area inside the Inner Belt. Downtown is home to most of the tallest buildings in Columbus. The state capitol, the Ohio Statehouse, is located in the center of downtown on Capitol ...
Many of the hospital's service areas were earmarked for this expansion, the most notable being a new 284,000-square-foot (26,400 m 2) six-story tower with one story below ground, [27] the conversion of the existing 419 beds to 381 all-private patient rooms as well as a thorough reconstruction of the original structure. [28]